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Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.

The cohort of workers employed in a Swedish vinyl chloride/poly(vinyl chloride) plant since its start in the early 1940's has been followed for mortality and cancer morbidity patterns. Only 21 of the 771 persons could not be traced. Difficulties in establishing exposure levels at different work...

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Autores principales: Byrén, D, Engholm, G, Englund, A, Westerholm, P
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1976
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1026402
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author Byrén, D
Engholm, G
Englund, A
Westerholm, P
author_facet Byrén, D
Engholm, G
Englund, A
Westerholm, P
author_sort Byrén, D
collection PubMed
description The cohort of workers employed in a Swedish vinyl chloride/poly(vinyl chloride) plant since its start in the early 1940's has been followed for mortality and cancer morbidity patterns. Only 21 of the 771 persons could not be traced. Difficulties in establishing exposure levels at different work areas in the past makes an evaluation of dose-effect relationships impossible. A four- to fivefold excess of pancreas/liver tumors was found, including two cases later classified as angiosarcomas of the liver. The number of brain tumors and suicide do not deviate significantly from expected. Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, on the other hand, differ significantly from the expected. The discrepancies between previous reports on VCM/PVC workers and this report are discussed. The possible etiology of the cardiovascular deaths is also discussed.
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spelling pubmed-14752582006-06-09 Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers. Byrén, D Engholm, G Englund, A Westerholm, P Environ Health Perspect Research Article The cohort of workers employed in a Swedish vinyl chloride/poly(vinyl chloride) plant since its start in the early 1940's has been followed for mortality and cancer morbidity patterns. Only 21 of the 771 persons could not be traced. Difficulties in establishing exposure levels at different work areas in the past makes an evaluation of dose-effect relationships impossible. A four- to fivefold excess of pancreas/liver tumors was found, including two cases later classified as angiosarcomas of the liver. The number of brain tumors and suicide do not deviate significantly from expected. Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, on the other hand, differ significantly from the expected. The discrepancies between previous reports on VCM/PVC workers and this report are discussed. The possible etiology of the cardiovascular deaths is also discussed. 1976-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1475258/ /pubmed/1026402 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Byrén, D
Engholm, G
Englund, A
Westerholm, P
Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title_full Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title_fullStr Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title_full_unstemmed Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title_short Mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of Swedish VCM and PCV production workers.
title_sort mortality and cancer morbidity in a group of swedish vcm and pcv production workers.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1475258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1026402
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AT englunda mortalityandcancermorbidityinagroupofswedishvcmandpcvproductionworkers
AT westerholmp mortalityandcancermorbidityinagroupofswedishvcmandpcvproductionworkers